Modern aspects of burn injury immunopathogenesis and immuno-biochemical markers of wound healing (review of literature)

Klin Lab Diagn. 2022 Aug 15;67(8):451-457. doi: 10.51620/0869-2084-2022-67-8-451-457.

Abstract

Burns are one of the most common traumatic injuries in the world, representing a global public health problem. Major burns (severe burn injury or burn disease) are one of the most life-threatening injuries. There is a great need to identify and monitor the development of complications (sepsis and septic shock, coagulopathy and DIC) in burned patients. The basis of the pathogenesis of burn injury, as well as any general pathological process, is an inflammatory reaction, ultimately aimed at restoring the structure and function of the damaged tissue. A feature of the inflammatory reaction in burn injury is the scale of alteration of the skin and mucous membranes. The review presents the main aspects of the burn injuries immunopathogenesis and the features of post-burn immune dysfunction, manifested by disorders in the innate and adaptive immunity systems. Attention is focused on the role in the immunopathogenesis of developing systemic and local disorders in burn injury. Also the role are discussed of a minor subpopulations of lymphocytes (Treg-, Th-17-, γδT-cells) in the immunopathogenesis and in the bacterial infection protection. The characteristics of the main immuno-biochemical markers of burn injury (cytokines and growth factors, nitric oxide, matrix metalloproteases, bacteria concentration levels) are present. The prognostic role of these biomarkers in assessing of the severity degree of patients with burn injury and wound healing processes is shown. The review has been compiled using references from major databases such as RSCI, Web of Science, PubMed, Scopus and Google Scholar (up to march 2022). After obtaining all reports from database, the papers were carefully analyzed in order to find data related to the topic of this review (60 references).

Keywords: burn injury; cytokines; growth factors; innate and adaptive immunity; markers; matrix metalloproteases; nitric oxide; review.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Biomarkers
  • Cytokines
  • Humans
  • Inflammation
  • Prognosis
  • Sepsis*
  • Wound Healing*

Substances

  • Biomarkers
  • Cytokines